A friend told me about a problem she was having with her horse and asked for help. I have had quite a few clients with the same or very similar problems. So I thought it would be useful to share the solution with everyone.
The problem was that her horse Fifo was anxious about being saddled, particularly about having the girth done up. She would pull back whenever the girth was being tightened, even just loosely
Here is my reply:
To find out how to relieve Fifo’s anxiety about the saddling process you need to determine if she is having current problems or memories of past issues. Let’s deal with potential current problems.
Use light pressure first, and then if you get no response use a moderate pressure. Do all these checks on both sides. Please be careful because even the nicest horse can bite or kick if this is uncomfortable for her. Remember that she can’t say “stop” or “that hurts” any other way.
- place hands over the top of withers and squeeze with fingertips on far side
- run your fingertips down her spine from the withers to the tail
- slide fingertips about 2 inches from spine from shoulder towards hind end
- run your fingers from behind the scapula down to girth box
- make a grid pattern with your thumb in her girth box
- slide thumb from elbow up towards withers (through the triceps muscle)
- run your fingers between her front legs back towards her tummy
If any of the above causes her to twitch excessively, to move away or sink down, or it feels as if you’re working on a board then her muscles are sore/tight. Probably her saddle/girth is, or was, causing her discomfort.
To fix the problem she needs a massage as well as some conditioning to understand that saddling and/or girthing isn’t going to hurt anymore.
Faith’s reply:
Thank you, thank you!
I will try that tomorrow and see what she does. If she’s not sure and it’s a memory… should I saddle her with her bareback pad for a while and gradually shift over to the saddle to see if there is a change?
Also, how often might I check her body the way you described? Would that be a good thing to do once a week or so whether or not she is showing active symptoms?
Faith
The answer is yes; if there is no negative response when you go to put on the bareback pad, only with the saddle.
I would recommend checking her before you ride for now until the symptoms go away. If there are no symptoms then the frequency of checking depends on how often you ride and how well your saddle/bareback pad fits.
I check my horse whenever I am hanging out with her and/or before I ride. Just because I know my saddle doesn’t fit perfectly and sometimes a beginner rides her who is not too quiet in the saddle. Plus by checking her she gets lots of mini massages and I can stop any problems from getting started. The biggest plus…she loves getting her massages.
Listen to what she is telling you, and assume she is telling the truth; whether or not you can believe it to be true. Her memories are currently true to her. Help her through them; don’t dismiss them as irrational.
Looking forward to hearing how it goes.